ISIS’ Recruitment/Mobilization In America Is WORSE Than We’re Being Told

In February 2008 Robert Mueller, then the FBI director gave testimony to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence which contained a warning:

“Over time, the greatest threat to the U.S. homeland came to be posed not so much by groups operating overseas (although a number of plots conceived by al Qaeda and its affiliates have been thwarted over the last decade), but from “self-radicalized, homegrown extremists in the United States.”

George Washington University’s Program on Extremism produced a report that outlined the threat Mueller warned about. Called ISIS In America, From Retweets to Raqqa the report details information about ISIS suspects that should make all Americans worried. ISIS represents a much larger danger to our collective well-being than we are being told about by this Administration.

According to the research the contacts generally begin with social media, but they expand:

ISIS-related radicalization is by no means limited to social media. While instances of purely web-driven, individual radicalization are numerous, in several cases U.S.-based individuals initially cultivated and later strengthened their interest in ISIS’s narrative through face-to-face relationships. In most cases online and offline dynamics complement one another. The spectrum of U.S.-based sympathizers’ actual involvement with ISIS varies significantly, ranging from those who are merely inspired by its message to those few who reached mid-level leadership positions within the group.

According to the report, as of Fall, 2015, there were roughly 250 Americans who were documented to have traveled or attempted to travel to Syria/Iraq to join the terrorist army, and there are currently 900 active investigations against ISIS sympathizers in all 50 states.

Since March, 2014:

71 people have been charged for ISIS-related activities

56 were arrested in 2015 alone– a record number of terrorism-related arrests for any year since 9/11.

The majority charged are male (86 percent) and 26 years old.

They were caught in 21 states, in which:

51 percent traveled or attempted to travel abroad,

27 percent were involved in plots to carry out attacks on U.S. soil,

55 percent were arrested in an operation involving an informant and/or an undercover agent.

To create this report, GW’s Program on Extremism researchers reviewed more than 7,000 pages of legal documents detailing ISIS-related legal proceedings. These included “criminal complaints, indictments, affidavits, and courtroom transcripts. Supplemented by original research and interviews with prosecutors, reporters, and, in some select cases, families of the charged individuals, the Program developed a snapshot of the 84 individuals who have been charged for various ISIS-related activities.”

The GW report has two elements:

The first examines all cases of U.S. persons arrested, indicted, or convicted in the United States for ISIS-related activities. A wide array of legal documents related to these cases provides empirical evidence for identifying several demographic factors related to the arrested individuals. This section also looks at the cases of other Americans who, while not in the legal system, are known to have engaged in ISIS-inspired behavior.

The second part of the report examines various aspects of the ISIS-related mobilization in America. Here the report analyzes the individual motivations of ISIS supporters; the role of the Internet and, in particular, social media, in their radicalization and recruitment processes; whether their radicalization took place in isolation or with other, like-minded individuals; and the degree of their tangible links to ISIS. It concludes with recommendations to combat ISIS recruitment.

The researchers uncovered that American ISIS supporters are not homogenous. They represent a range of ethnicity, socio-economic and educational backgrounds.

The Program on extremism identified roughly 300 American and/or U.S.-based ISIS sympathizers who are active on social media, spread propaganda, and interact with like-minded peers. As the report indicates the “online echo chamber eventually make the leap from keyboard warriors to actual militancy.”

ISIS sympathizers in America primarily use Twitter. The program identified user accounts that generate primary content, retweet material, or promote newly created accounts of suspended users. The range of U.S.-based sympathizers who are involved with or promoting ISIS varies from those who are inspired by ISIS’s message to those become leaders of social media groups.

This report reveals the extent to which Obama and others have allowed a steady infiltration of Islamists into the country, and how that infiltration has become a clear and present danger. Radical Islamism in this country has become a national emergency that is largely unreported and ignored.